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Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1986

Spin-label studies on phosphatidylcholine-cholesterol membranes: effects of alkyl chain length and unsaturation in the fluid phase

Akihiro Kusumi; Witold K. Subczynski; Marta Pasenkiewicz-Gierula; James S. Hyde; Hellmut Merkle

Dynamic properties of phosphatidylcholine-cholesterol membranes in the fluid phase and water accessibility to the membranes have been studied as a function of phospholipid alkyl chain length, saturation, mole fraction of cholesterol, and temperature by using spin and fluorescence labelling methods. The results are the following: (1) The effect of cholesterol on motional freedom of 5-doxyl stearic acid spin label (5-SASL) and 16-doxyl stearic acid spin label (16-SASL) in saturated phosphatidylcholine membrane is significantly larger than the effects of alkyl chain length and introduction of unsaturation in the alkyl chain. (2) Variation of alkyl chain length of saturated phospholipids does not alter the effects of cholesterol except in the case of dilauroylphosphatidylcholine, which possesses the shortest alkyl chains (12 carbons) used in this work. (3) Unsaturation of the alkyl chains greatly reduces the ordering effect of cholesterol at C-5 and C-16 positions although unsaturation alone gives only minor fluidizing effects. (4) Introduction of 30 mol% cholesterol to dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine membranes decreases the lateral diffusion constants of lipids by a factor of four, while it causes only a slight decrease of lateral diffusion in dioleoylphosphatidylcholine membranes. (5) If compared at the same temperature, 5-SASL mobilities plotted as a function of mole fraction of cholesterol in the fluid phases of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine-, dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine- and distearoylphosphatidylcholine-cholesterol membranes are similar in wide ranges of temperature (45-82 degrees C) and cholesterol mole fraction (0-50%). (6) In isothermal experiments with saturated phosphatidylcholine membranes, 5-SASL is maximally immobilized at the phase boundary between Regions I and III reported by other workers (Recktenwald, D.J. and McConnell, H.M. (1981) Biochemistry 20, 4505-4510) and becomes more mobile away from the boundary in Regions I and III. (7) 5-SASL in unsaturated phosphatidylcholine membranes showed a gradual monotonic immobilization with increase of cholesterol mole fraction without showing any maximum in the range of cholesterol fractions studied. (8) By rigorously determining rigid-limit magnetic parameters of cholestane spin labels in membranes from Q-band second-derivative ESR spectra to monitor the dielectric environment around the nitroxide radical, it is concluded that cholesterol incorporation increases water accessibility in the hydrophilic loci of the membrane. In contrast, 12-(9-anthroyloxy)stearic acid fluorescence showed that water accessibility is decreased in the hydrophobic loci of the membrane.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 1982

Dispersion electron spin resonance with the loop‐gap resonator

James S. Hyde; Wojciech Froncisz; Akihiro Kusumi

The loop‐gap resonator, a novel microwave lumped‐circuit structure, when used as a sample resonator in electron‐spin‐resonance spectroscopy, permits the direct detection of dispersion signals with greatly decreased demodulation of the FM noise that originates in the microwave oscillator. The improvement arises from two factors: 65 times higher energy density for a given input power and 12 times lower resonator Q compared with a typical cavity resonator. The signal‐to‐noise ratio for the dispersion signal of DPPH is predicted to be improved by a factor of 12×65=780; experimentally a factor of 700 was realized.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1987

Dynamic fluorescence quenching studies on lipid mobilities in phosphatidylcholine-cholesterol membranes

Hellmut Merkle; Witold K. Subczynski; Akihiro Kusumi

Bimolecular collision rate of 8-anilinonaphthalene-1-sulfonic acid (ANS) and the nitroxide doxyl group attached to various carbons on stearic acid spin labels (n-SASL) in phosphatidylcholine-cholesterol membranes in the fluid phase was studied by observing dynamic quenching of ANS fluorescence by n-SASLs. The excited-state lifetime of ANS and its reduction by the n-SASL doxyl group were directly measured by the time-correlated single photon counting technique to observe only dynamic quenching separately from static quenching and were analyzed by using Stern-Volmer relations. The collision rate of ANS with the n-SASL doxyl group ranges between 1 X 10(7) and 6 X 10(7), and the extent of dynamic quenching by n-SASL is in the order of 5-much much greater than 6- greater than 7- less than 9- less than 10- less than 12- less than 16-SASL (less than 5-SASL) in dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) membranes. Collision rate of 16-SASL is only 10% less than that of 5-SASL. Since the naphthalene ring of ANS is located in the near-surface region of the membrane, these results indicate that the methyl terminal of SASL appears in the near surface area frequently, probably due to extensive gauche-trans isomerism of the methylene chain. The presence of 30 mol% cholesterol decreases the collision rate of ANS with 12- and 16-SASL doxyl groups but not with the 5-SASL doxyl group in DMPC membranes. On the other hand, in egg-yolk phosphatidylcholine membranes, inclusion of 30 mol% cholesterol does not affect the collision of ANS with either 5-SASL or 16-SASL doxyl groups, in agreement with our previous observation that alkyl chain unsaturation moderates cholesterol effects on lipid motion in the membrane (Kusumi et al., Biochim. Biophys. Acta 854, 307-317). It is suggested that dynamic quenching of ANS fluorescence by lipid-type spin labels is a useful new monitor of membrane fluidity that reports on various lipid mobilities in the membrane; a class of motion can be preferentially observed over others by selecting a proper spin label, i.e., rotational diffusion of lipid about its long axis and translational diffusion by using 5-SASL, wobbling motion of the lipid long axis by using 7-SASL or androstane spin label, and gauche-trans isomerism by using 16-SASL.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1986

Effects of very small amounts of cholesterol on gel-phase phosphatidylcholine membranes

Witold K. Subczynski; Akihiro Kusumi

The mobility of 5-doxyl stearic acid spin label (5-SASL) in the gel phase of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine membranes between the main transition and subtransition temperatures was studied as a function of cholesterol content. Very small amounts of cholesterol (0.01-1 mol%) cause a dramatic increase in the mobility of 5-SASL. Temperature-drop experiments from 38 degrees C to 28 degrees C were made across the pretransition temperature and the rate of approach to equilibrium was measured. Cholesterol at low concentrations also affects this rate. The membrane reached equilibrium after 10 h in the absence of cholesterol, 3 h at 0.01 mol% cholesterol, and less than 10 min at 0.03 mol% cholesterol.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1985

Detection of oxygen consumption during very early stages of lipid peroxidation by ESR nitroxide spin probe method

Witold K. Subczynski; Akihiro Kusumi

Oxygen consumption during the very early stages of the spontaneous peroxidation of egg yolk phosphatidylcholine membranes was studied by monitoring the oxygen concentration in the aqueous phase of the sample using a spin-probe closed-chamber method. The method depends on the broadening by oxygen of the proton superhyperfine lines of the electron spin resonance spectra of the nitroxide radical spin probe 3-carbamoyl-2,2,5,5-tetramethyl-3-pyrroline-1-yloxyl. It is concluded that this method is useful in monitoring lipid peroxidation and that it monitors the onset of the peroxidation process before the commonly used thiobarbituric acid assay detects the peroxidation products.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1984

Human aglycosyl-IgG exhibits increased hydrophobicity: Binding/fluorescence studies with 8-anilinonaphthalene-1-sulfonic acid (ANS)

J.Taves Cynthia; Akihiro Kusumi; Jeffrey L. Winkelhake

Human monoclonal, aglycosyl-IgG produced in vitro in the presence of tunicamycin, was compared with its native and acid pH-altered counterparts for their respective abilities to bind the fluorescent hydrophobicity probe, 8-anilinonaphthalene sulfonate. A novel technique based on continuous-flow dynamic dialysis (Sparrow et al., 1982, Anal. Biochem. 123:255-264) allowed binding studies under non-equilibrium conditions. While the native IgG conformation exhibits two, weak ANS binding sites (ca. 10(3) l/mol), aglycosyl-IgG has one weak and one moderate affinity (least squares average Ka = 2 X 10(4) l/mol) site, and the acid conformer binds yet another two ANS molecules with moderate affinity (4 X 10(4) l/mol). Increases in affinity and in the number of sites correlate roughly with increased relative percent fluorescence by conventional fluorimetry. The fluorescence lifetime of ANS bound to altered IgGs is about 10% longer (T2 = 15 nsec by time-resolved fluorimetry) than that for native IgG. All populations also exhibit a rapid decay component (T1 = 3 nsec) analogous to that seen for ANS in 50% aqueous dioxane. Results are discussed in relation to structural role(s) for IgG-linked heterosaccharides.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1986

Fc:Fc interactions revealed by spin-labeled IgG heterosaccharides in model immune complexes

Akihiro Kusumi; Jeffrey L. Winkelhake

Dynamic properties of spin-labelled heterosaccharides in the Fc-region of murine monoclonal antihapten immunoglobulin G were studied in model immune complexes (IC) as a function of the IC size. Model IC dimers, trimers and oligomers were formed using bivalent photoaffinity antigens. The ESR spectrum exhibits two components. The rotational correlation time of the less-immobilized species is shorter than 10(-10) sec, and that of the more-immobilized component is in the order to 10(-9) approximately 10(-8) sec depending on the IC size. Fraction of the more-immobilized spin labels increases, and the mobility of this component decreases with increase in IC size (i.e., mobility: monomers approximately equal to dimers greater than trimers much greater than immune-complex precipitates). These data strongly suggest the existence of Fc:Fc interactions in IC, and provide the basis for a model in which such interactions underlie the initial mechanism by which the information of antigen binding to Fab region is transferred into organized Fc:Fc association structure for IgG effector activities.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1989

Oxygen permeability of phosphatidylcholine--cholesterol membranes

Witold K. Subczynski; James S. Hyde; Akihiro Kusumi


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1982

Oxygen transport parameter in membranes as deduced by saturation recovery measurements of spin-lattice relaxation times of spin labels

Akihiro Kusumi; Witold K. Subczynski; James S. Hyde


Archive | 2016

Oxygen transport parameter in mei saturation recovery measurements relaxation times of spin labels

Akihiro Kusumi; Witold K. Subczynski; James

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Witold K. Subczynski

Medical College of Wisconsin

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James S. Hyde

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Hellmut Merkle

Medical College of Wisconsin

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